Copperhead (Starbuck Chronicles)
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Average customer review:Product Description
A copperhead is a turncoat – a northerner who sympathises with the South. Captain Nate Starbuck, forced out of his beloved Legion by the enmity of its founder, General Washington Faulconer, becomes caught up in a dangerous double game of espionage.
He is given no choice but to travel from a prison cell in Richmond, Virginia, to the secret centre of the high Northen command in a desperate attempt to thwart Yankee strategy which threatens to overwhelm the South.
Starbuck plays a difficult and complex game of bluff and betrayal in a winner-takes-all effort to save his own life and return to the Legion – but at a high cost to his personal and professional loyalties as a friend and a man of war.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #7031 in Books
- Published on: 1995-01-16
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 480 pages
Editorial Reviews
Synopsis
Copperhead was the name given to Northern sympathisers of the Confederacy, after a venomous species of North American snake. It is a name that sticks to Nathaniel Starbuck, a preacher's son who has run away from family, college and a foolish love affair, taking shelter in the Falconer legion.
Customer Reviews
Cornwell at his best!!
After reading Rebel the first book in the Starbuck Chronicles, I must confess that I was in no particular hurry to read the second. Nathanial Starbuck was a pale shadow of Richard Sharpe, lacking in depth and with motives that were not at all convincing. However Copperhead marks a return to form for Cornwell, not only does Starbuck gain a fresh depth of character and plausibility but the supporting characters are fleshed out. The battle scenes (as is usual with Cornwell)are rip-roaring. A great read! Highly recommended.
Pathetic Hero Drags the Series Down
Following in the tepid footsteps of Rebel is Cornwell's equally disappointing second tale of Nate Starbuck—a young Northerner who fights in the Confederate Army during the American Civil War. Starbuck is a very weak hero for Cornwell to hitch his Civil War series wagon to, and it's hard to care very much about his adventures. As in the previous book, comes across as more of a reflexively rebellious teenager than a heroic man of action. While it would have been interesting to see Starbuck really struggle with himself about the morality of his actions in joining the rebellion, the bulk of such internal conflicts are actually left to his best friend, Adam, who is a Southerner born and bred, and bullied by his father into uniform.
In this installment, Nate is drummed out of the "Faulconer Legion" by its commander, the vain, inept, and rich Gen. Faulconer, who hates him. This leads him to a Richmond prison cell, accused of being a Northern spy, all of which gets him enmeshed in the spycraft between the states. This rather conveniently dovetails with the activities of Adam Faulconer and Nate's own straight-laced brother. The spy material is rather interesting, with the appearance of real-life Alan Pinkerton as Union spymaster. The South's attempt to deceive the North as to its true manpower is particularly fascinating, and is portrayed by Cornwell as an element in their avoiding early defeat, along with Gen. McClelland's timidity.
While these semi-historical asides and speculations are interesting, the best part of the book is the walk-on cameo by a French Army observer Patrick Lésawn. Yes, he is the son of rifleman Richard Sharpe (hero of Cornwell's infinitely better Napoleonic series), and a vastly more compelling character than Starbuck. Indeed, one wishes Cornwell had decided to show the Civil War from within his eyes instead! Over the course of the book Starbuck displays a moral cowardice that makes him more and more unlikable, especially his pathetic treatment of his brother, when his brother reaches out to him. I'll continue the series in blind devotion to Cornwell, but these first two in the series are pretty weak.
Well researched and highly entertaining
After a slow start to the series with Rebel, Copperhead continues the story of Starbuck with a highly entertaining and very well researched account of McClellan's Peninsular campaign of 1862. Cornwell is an extremly fine writer of historical fiction and the Starbuck chronicles are second only to the Sharpe Series in terms of entertainment and an easy to get into historical account of the wars of the nineteenth century. For all fans of historical fiction i highly recommend this book and indeed, the whole of the Starbuck quartet. With action, brutal warfare, intrigue, treachery and treason, this book has everything a reader could want in a historical war book.




